Online education startup Udemy in talks to raise US$100m in funding: sources
[NEW YORK] Online learning platform Udemy is in advanced talks to raise around US$100 million in a new private funding round that will value the online learning platform at over US$3 billion, according to people familiar with the matter.
San Francisco-based Udemy has seen a boost in subscriptions this year as more people have stayed at home and opted for online learning due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
The fresh capital would follow the US$50 million Udemy raised in a Series E round from Japanese publisher Benesse Holdings at a valuation of US$2 billion in February.
Edtech companies have seen faster and wider adoptions as more people switch to remote learning due to restrictions during the pandemic. Private funding in the sector has surpassed 2019 levels, with over US$4.8 billion raised by August 2020, according to CB Insights.
In July, Coursera, another major online classes provider, raised US$130 million as part of its Series F funding.
Udemy has seen growing demand from its consumer-faced marketplace, as well as its corporate learning service, Udemy for Business, which has achieved US$100 million annual recurring revenue, the company said this week. The service counts companies including PayPal, Apple and Unilever as its customers.
A NEWSLETTER FOR YOU
Garage
The hottest news on all things startup and tech to kickstart your week.
Between February and March, Udemy has seen a 425 per cent spike in enrollments for individuals. It is also expanding footprints to fast-growing markets including Brazil, India and Japan.
Udemy has hired Goldman Sachs to advise on the fundraising, the sources said, requesting anonymity as the matter is private.
Udemy and Goldman Sachs declined to comment.
REUTERS
KEYWORDS IN THIS ARTICLE
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Startups
A cheat sheet of M&As in South-east Asia
Robot at your service
Indonesia’s Jago Coffee raises US$6 million in Series A funding
Is Grab’s ride-hailing business future-proof?
Climate startups need more corporate help to compete for infrastructure funding
Fintech funding in South-east Asia falls 13% in Q1 amid economic slowdown: report